2006.12.13

Iran: Exposing Appeasement

Last week I said that the Baker-Hamilton report 'may be useful as a microcosm - or a Rohrshcach - of the Iraq debate. Perhaps, too, it will give the public a chance to consider, and reject, the empty and failed policies of the past.'

Michael Ledeen writing at AEI seems to be thinking along the same lines:

The Surrender Commission Report underlines the basic truth about the war, which is that we cannot possibly win it by fighting defensively in Iraq alone. So long as Iran and Syria have a free shot at us and our Iraqi allies, they can trump most any military tactics we adopt, at most any imaginable level of troops. Until the publication of the report this was the dirty secret buried under years of misleading rhetoric from our leaders; now it is front and center. Either deal effectively with Iran, or suffer a humiliating defeat, repeating the terrible humiliation of Lebanon in the Eighties when Iran and Syria bombed us out of the country (thereby providing the template for the terror war in Iraq).

The Surrender Commission members do not shrink from humiliation. They want American troops out of Iraq, and therefore they advocate appeasing the Syrians and Iranians. But a considerable number of Americans don’t want to be humiliated by the clerical fascists in Tehran, and I think it’s fair to say the recommendations have largely bombed, despite the flattering photos in Vogue, and the fawning attention from the MSM, including Time’s respectful parroting of (what they must know is) mullah disinformation, and reporting, with an obvious tone of sadness, that the Baker/Hamilton call for talks is more popular in Tehran than in America.

Time Magazine, by the way, most certainly does know what it is doing. In January I posted on Time's article by Azadeh Moaveni about Iranian dissidents. Moaveni's article itself was quite good, but as I noted at the time, a link that was meant to go to Regime Change Iran (I know this for a fact because I confirmed it by telephone with Doctor Zin) somehow appeared as "regimechange.blogspot.com" in the article - a left-wing blog, and not an Iranian opposition blog.

The error remains uncorrected to this very day. I know this because I just went back to the Time article, and there it is. I do not believe this happened by accident, but regardless of that, I contacted Time by e-mail several times requesting that they fix the error. Doctor Zin told me he had contacted Time as well. So even if the error was an accident, its perpetuation is not. Well-meaning journalists may write what they please, but what gets printed is up to the editors, as the neoconservatives interviewed by David Rose for Vanity Fair found out the hard way. (My post is here.)

Back to Ledeen.

Most Americans are disgusted at the thought of an American president kissing the Supreme Leader’s turban, as are Jim Woolsey and Jon Kyl, who put it very nicely in an open letter to President Bush. Talking to the mullahs is wrong for many reasons, they say:

First, such negotiations will legitimate that increasingly dangerous regime and reward its violent and hostile actions against us and our allies. We should rather endeavor to discredit and undermine this regime. Second, such a course will embolden our enemies who already believe they are sapping our will to resist them. Third, such an initiative would buy further time for the Iranian mullahs to obtain and prepare to wield weapons of mass destruction. Fourth, entering into negotiations with Tehran’s theocrats will create the illusion that we are taking useful steps to contend with the threat from Iran--when, in fact, we would not be. As a result, other, more effective actions--specifically, steps aimed at encouraging regime change in Iran--will not be pursued.


The ideological ground in America is shifting in many ways that cannot be reduced to red and blue numbers. The American people do not want to go back to the world of September 10. Ledeen concludes: '... Iran is waging war against us and our allies throughout the region, and a real debate about Iran may, at long last, force us to face the real (regional) strategic problem. If that happens, we can take the Woolsey/Kyl letter as a starting point for a serious war-winning policy, which must have as its basic mission the removal of the regimes in Tehran and Damascus.'

This is what I've been saying all along, and I think that when Americans are conftonted with naked appeasement, they will be disgusted. This is part of a national awakening to the media's lies, and to the truth of what is at stake in the Middle East. It's an awakening to act on our own highest values. As Ledeen is fond of saying: Faster, please.

2006.11.18

Iraq Study Group

The Iraq Study Group, according to its website,

is a bipartisan group of prominent Americans supported by four premier institutions. It is led by co-chairs James A. Baker, III, the nation’s 61st Secretary of State and Honorary Chairman of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University, and Lee H. Hamilton, former Congressman and Director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

The other members of the study group include: Lawrence S. Eagleburger, Vernon E. Jordan, Jr., Edwin Meese III , Sandra Day O'Connor, Leon E. Panetta, William J. Perry, Charles S. Robb, and Alan K. Simpson.


The Iraq Study Group is connected with something called the "United States Institute of Peace".

Wikipedia: 'The Iraq Study Group (ISG), also known as the Baker-Hamilton Commission, or simply the Baker Commission, is a ten-person panel appointed on March 15, 2006, by the United States Congress, that is charged with delivering an independent assessment of the situation in Iraq and the US-led Iraq War. It was first proposed by Virginia Republican Representative Frank Wolf. The panel has no direct authority to change Iraq policy, but will make policy recommendations.'

As reported by Wikipedia, the members of the Iraq Study Group are as follows:

The ISG is led by co-chairs James Baker, a former Secretary of State (Republican) and Lee Hamilton (Democrat), a former U.S. Representative and the vice chair of the 9/11 Commission. It is composed of four additional Republicans and four additional Democrats.

Republicans
In addition to Baker, the panel's Republicans are:
Sandra Day O'Connor, former Supreme Court Justice
Lawrence Eagleburger, former Secretary of State
Edwin Meese III, former US Attorney General
Alan K. Simpson, former Wyoming Senator
Former New York City mayor Rudolph Giuliani was originally a member but resigned on May 24, 2006, stating in a letter to co-chair Baker "my previous time commitments do not permit me the full and active participation that the Iraq Study Group deserves." He was replaced by Meese.
Former Director of Central Intelligence Robert M. Gates was also a member of the panel until he was replaced by Lawrence Eagleburger on November 10, 2006. Gates resigned because he was nominated by President George W. Bush as US Secretary of Defense on 8 November 2006, replacing Donald Rumsfeld.


Democrats
In addition to Hamilton, the panel's Democrats are:
Vernon Jordan, Jr., business executive
Leon E. Panetta, former White House Chief of Staff
William J. Perry, former US Secretary of Defense
Charles S. Robb, former Governor of Virginia and former U.S. Senator


Austin Bay believes the Iraq Study Group is a face-saving strategy for the Democrats:
The Baker-Hamilton study group will not produce any new thinking. The U.S. military has analyzed and gamed every course of action, including cut and run. For that matter, it gamed “non-intervention” in Iraq as well.

What Baker and Hamilton provide is political cover for Democrats. Our plan has been a sound one — build Iraqi security and political institutions to the point US and coalition forces move to “strategic overwatch.” ...

Which is where Baker-Hamilton comes in. Baker-Hamilton is an academic committee. I guarantee the John Kerry-level strategic geniuses who participated in the study have radcially differing views of the issues, different definitions of problems, and a spectrum of mutually-incoherent policy prescriptions. (Like I said, it’s an academic committee.) My bet is the Baker-Hamilton “consensus” will ultimately reflect Jim Baker’s and Lee Hamilton’s two-man consensus (in other words, truth in packaging unusual in government and academia).

If we are lucky, the Baker-Hamilton magic show will drop a scarf over the top hat and with a the ”poof” of a New York Times headline produce a “unifying” policy of words that will let the Democrats join the war, despite the howls of their blogosphere nutsroots.


Read the full post at the link.

The Iraq Study Group is suspected by Gateway Pundit of being infiltrated by agents of the islamist regime in Iran - the same Tehran regime that's killing innocent Iraqis and American soldiers daily.

Now, there are concerns that a group of highly placed Iranian Regime lobbyist/agents, so called "Iranian experts", have peddled bad information into the Iraq Study Group hoping to shape the upcoming recommendations by that group.

A couple of names of known Iranian sympathizers who may be shaping the opinion of the Iraq Study Group are Houshang Amir Ahmadi and Hamid Dabashi.

Professor Daniel M. Zucker wrote at Iran Terror Database about the very sophisticated disinformation campaign dished out by the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security.

The mullahs have fooled Jimmy Carter and other democrats before and they are fooling them again now says Zucker. Hasn't Carter done enough in creating militant Islam? When is the left ever going to learn? Why do we have to pay for their ignorance and cluelessness?


Gateway Pundit isn't alone: this post at the Free Iran News Forum declares: "Has Iran Infiltrated the Baker "Iraq Study Group"? The answer is YES!"

Now Gateway Pundit has more concerns about the Iranian regime influencing the Baker Iraq Study Group:

Another Iranian Human Rights Activist writes in demanding that the Iraq Study Group release the names of the Iranians they are interviewing for their report:

We must publicize this by putting enough pressure on the Baker Iraq Study Group to reveal the names of all of their so-called Iranian-experts. Trust me, there are many Iranian activists who know much more about such Iranian characters than many Americans do and we are here to help.

Unless, America clearly knows who, among the so-called "Iranian experts", has influenced the Baker Commission, I have no doubt that she will be making her greatest mistake to accept ISG's recommendations. Baker Commission must announce the names of Iranians who have helped/influenced ISG's recommendations. America needs to also trust her ordinary loyal Iranian-American citizens who have a better understanding about the so-called "Iranian-experts" and tell America which one is an Iranian regime sympathizer.

I bet, for example, very few Americans may know that Hooshang Amirahmadi was also a candidate for Iranian Presidency in 2005. Aftab News on May 11, 2005, while announcing Hooshang Amirahmadi's candidacy for Islamic Regime's presidency, stated (translated from Farsi):

Amirahmadi believes that there is no reason for his disqualification, because he is a patriotic Iranian and he has never acted against the Islamic Republic and he has never been a member of any group or faction.


Gateway Pundit concludes:
If Mr. Amirahmadi is indeed working with the Iraq Study Group, one must ask: will he use them as tools? He did not need to brownnose the Islamic regime in Aftab News or Baztab News; no one could ever mistake him with an opposition member to Islamic Regime. With pictures (such as those posted here), where he is with Javad Zarif and Mullah Kahrubi, he can not possibly qualify to be an honorable opposition member.

Winston at The Spirit of Man weighs in. A commenter adds, "I hate this. I pray Bush does not take any of this crapola 'advice'. No wonder it says to have Iran help make peace where Iran is the cause of the unrest!"

I'll post any further information I find on the Baker Iraq Study Group.

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